For the reform agenda of the nation’s second largest
(and most dysfunctional) public school system, Los Angeles Unified
School District (LAUSD), the year in which major revelations
to fix a broken system came and went. One thing we know for
sure, for LAUSD Superintendent, Admiral David Brewer, the ditch
is getting deeper. But this daunting task to fix LAUSD wasn’t
specific to him, as this would have been the case for anyone
who was selected to take the job. However, Admiral Brewer’s
selection was a political coup in the midst of a highly political
attempted takeover. His arrival, as controversial as it was
(the board rejected Mayor Villaraigosa’s request to sign off
on the selection), was falsely heralded as some sort of salvation
for the children of the district. It would be impossible for
any one man (or woman) to save LAUSD.
False expectations are a reformer’s worse enemy
and reform can’t happen in a vacuum. He will need help from
the School Board, from the Mayor, from the teachers and their
union, from the administrative and classified employees, from
parents groups and from the students themselves. Most of these
segments have been slow to arrive, but the buck stops at Brewer,
in the eyes of the public. The criticism of Brewer’s progress
(or lack thereof) has been increasing over the past few months
(coinciding with his first anniversary at the helm of the district).
Everybody has a report card, Mr. Superintendent (including you).
Yet, the city, and the black community in particular, shouldn’t
get caught up in the hype. We should evaluate Admiral Brewer
in the truest context in which his job has occurred. If that
means defending the indefensible (the continuing dysfunction
of the district), for a minute, we need to be prepared to do
that.
Let me state, for the record, that I am a severe
critic of LAUSD, and have said on more than one occasion that
I would never put a child of mine (or grandchild) in LAUSD,
in its current state. I’d home school them first. LAUSD has
produced three generations of functional illiterates. The overwhelming
majority of students are not being sufficiently educated - though
we are quick to point to exceptions as the rule. We now know
that the rule is the rule. The median LAUSD student doesn’t
graduate and reads below the sixth grade level. We’ve long known
that thirty years of ignoring the district’s facilities infrastructure
would eventually catch up with it, as schools built to house
700 to 1,000 students frequently house 2,000 to 3,000 students.
Classroom size has ballooned from 25 to 45 (larger in some instances)
and learning materials have been disparately distributed throughout
the district. The quality of teaching has fallen as demand for
teachers has been met with inexperienced and emergency credentialed
“newbies,” under-prepared to teach the students most in need
of curricular and cultural enrichment.
LAUSD
hasn’t been a pretty picture for some time, as two of the last
three Mayors have taken over the legislative policy aspect (school
board) to influence and hopefully to change the administrative
performance of the district. Two superintendents focused on
the infra-structure enhancement of the district, largely because
it was easier than focusing on the academic enhancement of the
district. Nobody, except the black school board members (Barbara
Boudreaux, Genethia Hayes and now Margeruite LaMotte), have
called for radical school reconstruction of the district to
address the most underperforming and culturally deficient schools,
until Villaraigosa made it a campaign issue for Mayor (and it
was an issue he got from us, the black community). That’s the
issue on which he and I came together in 2001 (when nobody was
with him) and again in 2005 (when everybody was with him). In
that regard, he should be credited with making public schools
the salient issue of the city and for being the impetus for
forcing the change that produced Brewer’s appointment.
However, everybody knew the next superintendent
was stepping into a “no win” situation. If anything, there were
those of us who, early on, warned that Brewer had a short window
of opportunity “to make something happen,” or he’d be set-up
for a takedown - victim of a monstrosity of a bureaucratic beast
that has chewed up and spit out more than its fair share of
“reformers” over the past three decades. Now know for sure that
the honeymoon of David Brewer is over. His bride (Villaraigosa)
never showed up and is still on his mission to control the 30
bottom performing schools through a $50 million dollar private
fund. That’s really the least of Brewer’s worries. He can’t
control what the Mayor going to do, but he can control the things
he can do - and he hasn’t done a great job of that, namely bringing
in his own team and charting his own course (with his own strategic
plan). Those are his Achilles heel.
Brewer went on a honeymoon tour around the city
and danced with most any and everyone he thought could give
him a clue (more on this in a minute). Of late, however, David
Brewer is a pretty lonely man. The majority of those who were
responsible for his selection have since been voted off the
school board. Like a groom waiting at the alter for his bride,
Brewer spent the better part of his first year waiting for a
partner (the Mayor) who has yet to show up.
Brewer's
top administrative slots are either vacant or disloyal. The
one thing his predecessor, Romer, did was clear out the top
ranks, restructure and appoint his people in strategic positions.
He raided the naval administrative ranks to do so, and they
didn’t know sh*t about education - but they knew how to manage
large administrative budgets, so they advanced the construction
of new schools with newly available bond money and he got his
people paid in the process because of their loyalty. Brewer,
being a military man, should know that loyalty comes above everything
else in any new situation. It’s hard as hell to run a monster
like LAUSD when you don’t know whom to trust.
Then, there’s the issue of the strategic plan.
In the first month of Brewer’s appointment, I attended at least
four meetings where we heard about this plan. In the last six
months, I’ve offered Brewer (through his people) the opportunity
to use the Urban Issues Forum to roll out his strategic plan.
I’ve only seen him at social events since then (he does a lot
of those - too many in my opinion), but the absence of a plan
is now the bat being used to hit him over the head. And it’s
Brewer’s own bat. He needs to get on track with that. Appearing
in Larry Aubrey’s and other columns/papers every week is not
a good thing. It’s not good to give the public and education
critics ammunition to beat you up (or down). I’ve been an interested
observer of this point, and the tide is clearly turning against
David Brewer. Los Angeles has been known as a city that will
pile on when they have a person down. This is a call to opt
for reason, given the task this Superintendent (any superintendent)
faces. It is time to watch a little closer and help if we can.
One way to help is to create a public discussion about it and
see where things go from there.
This is a district that ate up and spit out desegregation
(Los Angeles was the first city the federal courts withdrew
from mandatory busing because of the resistance and largeness
of the district). David Brewer would be a small chew, comparatively
speaking. This is my last attempt at publicly defending what
I’ve long considered to be an indefensible situation. Next time,
I may not be as diplomatic (just ask the Mayor what I mean).
I’m trying to address this issue reverently.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad is a national columnist, managing
director of the Urban Issues Forum
and author of the new book, Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His
Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click
here to contact Dr. Samad.